Pat Sullivan Interview
If succeeding as an
entrepreneur is hard, then succeeding as an entrepreneur multiple times is
even harder. Few entrepreneurs are able to repeat or improve upon their
prior success.
One exception is Pat Sullivan,
former CEO of Interact Commerce Corporation.
To date, Pat has created two successful
products and companies - Act and SalesLogix. Act is the product that
created the Contact Manager category and is the leading brand in the
category, with over 3 million users. SalesLogix is a leading middle market
sales automation solution, with over 3,000 customers, and was recently
sold to Sage Software for $250 million.
I have known Pat for 10 years
and, in my conversations with him over the years, have heard Pat make
numerous references to "pain" when he explained how he
generated, evaluated, and communicated ideas for new products and
services. As a result, I decided to have a frank discussion with Pat about both his successes and his
failures.
Chris: Tell me the story of Act. How did you come up with the
idea? Was there an event that led you to come up with the idea for the
product? What were you doing at the time that you came up with the idea
for the product?
Pat: I had no intention of creating Act! I was a computer
salesman. Selling computers every day. Selling Lotus 1-2-3 and dBase and
software along with it.
I had, in the
process of selling, lots of problems. I had pain. That's the best way to
say it.
Somebody would come in to the
retail store and say "I want to get a quotation on a computer"
and they wanted to see it 3 or 4 different ways. They would say "I
want it with an Okidata printer, I want it with an Epson printer, I want
it with color, I want it without color, I want it with 640 KB of
memory." So there were lots of different options.
Trying to respond to those
requests manually was impossible, and it would eat into the time that I
had to sell. It would just be an enormous amount of work. Hours and hours
spent pulling together quotes.
So the first thing that I did
was to start to fool around with Lotus 1-2-3 and try to figure out if I
could come up with a way to do quotes - build a quotation system. And
over a period of a couple of months fooled around with it and found that I
could come up with a way that would work for me where I could, with a
couple of clicks of keys, enter what it was that the customer was looking
for, hit a button that would produce a quote for me telling me exactly
what my margins would be, that would allow me to discount and know what my
margin would be after discount, play all kinds of what if games as to how
I was going to price it. What if it included this? What if it included
that? What if it didn't include that? Play all the what if games. And then
print, on letterhead, something that I could give to a customer. That was
actually over a period of several months that it took me to get to
something that was truly useful.
Now, as part of that I obviously
learned how to use Lotus. Actually I was using Lotus Symphony at the time
because it had come out and had a more powerful language. It allowed me to
do more.
One of the last things that I
did was to put in something that could help me track who my contacts were
and what I last said to them and when I need to call them back and what is
it that they are interested in. It was contact management. Act really came
out of a need that I had that was actually secondary to the quotation
thing.
The thing is though, that Act
and the contact management part is very generic. That pain was pain that
everybody felt. The quotation thing is something that was not. Everybody's
method of quoting their products or their services is not generic. So
there was no way to create a generic quotation product.
That's still true today. If you
look at the configurator market there's just no way to produce a generic
quotation package. But, the thing that was generic was this whole notion
of tracking contacts and knowing what it is that we talked about, what is
important to them, and what to do next - scheduling my activities. It was
that really that started me on the idea. When people started to see what I
had they would start to say "Wow. You could make this into a
product."
Of course, you really couldn't
because it was just a Symphony template. I tried to figure out whether I
could sell this as a Symphony template, but Symphony had all kinds of
problems with it and templates just don't go over. It had to be a saleable
product.
So basically what happened was
out of my trying to make my own pain go away I ended up with something
that served as a prototype of what eventually became Act. What we did was
utilize that as a prototype, went out and raised $100,000, and hired a
couple of real programmers to begin to rewrite this prototype thing that I
did but doing it using a very commercial language in a very commercial
way.
Some 10 months later we shipped
the first version of Act. But the first thing I did was not contact
management.
Was there a moment that the idea hit you for this or was it more
of a building up of frustration process?
It was a very gradual thing. I started out kind of with a feeling
of "I'm selling these computers to people and I don't have a real
reason to use them." And I thought to myself "I wonder if there
is software for salespeople?" I actually went out and tried to look
around and find some and found that there actually were. There were a
couple of programs that were kind of early forerunners of Act - very early
forerunners - a lot of it dBase stuff. But I would look at it and then I'd
say "Oh, this is awful. This is terrible." This was just not any
way that I visualized how I would want to use something. It just wasn't
productive.
What was so bad about it?
I think mainly it was dBase. DBase imposes a user interface and
there are really only a few ways that you can build an application using
dBase as the tool. They generally were very unusable. They were not
user-friendly. They were a menu. 1 - Find Customers. 2 - Send a Mailing to
Customers. There was no sense of a production system that you could use
while you were sitting at a phone making phone calls and looking up things
and then say "Write a letter" and then boom out comes a letter.
There just was no usefulness. It just wasn't useful. It didn't make the
pain go away.
Can you talk a little bit more about how you made the
transition from having this tool for yourself to thinking about it as a
product. Was there an insight that you had or did someone else goad you to
take the next step?
Well, the process was gradual. I had no intention of building a
product or building a company. I was really just kind of messing around
and seeing if I could learn how to program. Could I use this for something
useful? I knew I had a lot of routine things that I hated to do and so it
just started that way and then, once I got into it, it became really an
obsession. I became obsessed with trying to figure out how to use the
computer to make routine things that I hated to do go away. Make them be a
non-issue. Make myself far more productive than I had been before. I hate
routine. Filling out an order. Getting out another order sheet. Filling
out the order for the ninth time that is essentially the same kind of
order that I filled out the eighth time.
I just hated doing that. So
making it became an obsession.
Once it became an obsession I
began to say "OK, this works pretty well, but how can I make it
better? How can I make so that it's even faster?" And then other
salespeople that I worked with began to see what I was using and what I
was doing and they asked "Can I use that?" I said "Sure,
why not. Here." They would begin to say "Hey, it would be neat
if it could do this and it would be great if it could do that".
It was over a period of about 2
years that this prototype developed that was not only being used by me but
by about eight or nine other sales reps that I worked with.
It was during that period of
time that my boss, who was a good friend, called me into his office and
said "Sullivan, I know what you're doing. One of these days you are
going to walk into my office and say 'I quit. I'm going to start a
software company'." That actually was the very first time that it
occurred to me that I might be able to do this. He actually planted the
idea that "Gosh, maybe this could be a product. Maybe I could sell
this and make a living." But it was really almost a year later, after
almost constant refinement and development - and that's when the contact
management stuff came - that I walked into his office and I said
"Tom. Remember a year or so ago you said that I was going to walk in
here and tell that I was going to quit and create a software company?
Well, I'm going to do it." And he said "Well, I've been waiting
for you." So I left in good graces with him and he was a big fan - in
fact is still a big fan. He and I are good friends today. But he planted
the first seed.
I was a young guy. I had young
kids. I had no real idea of how you start a company or anything. I knew
how to sell. General management was certainly not in my background at all.
So that's really how it kind of went from the germ of an idea and
eventually it became a product and a company.
Why do you think people invested in the idea? What do you
think they saw that made them think there was something there?
I'll never know why the first guy who put in $100,000 did so,
because he did so without a business plan. We didn't know him personally.
He was a friend of a friend whom I sat down and met with and spent a day,
day and a half with demoing what the Symphony template could do. Just
talking through some of the plans and what we thought we were going to be
able to do. Basically, he and I came to an agreement of where "If I
put in $100,000 how much of the company will I get." I had no clue
what that should be but, as it turned out, it was a fair amount. It was a
fair amount for him. It was a good deal. It was really on the strength of
spending a day and a half with him, showing him the stuff. He became
convinced that we had something, though we weren't sure. We weren't sure
what it was we had.
How did you get the idea out there? How did you sell it? How did
you market the product? Did you use lots of advertising? What tactics and
strategies did you use?
Once we got the product build, we raised additional money as we
were building the product for marketing purposes. As the product was
coming together it was easier to show it to people and then say "Hey,
this thing could be big. This could be good." So once we were ready
to launch, we still didn't have a lot of money. We did not have the kind
of money necessary to do a massive advertising campaign, so what chose to
do was to advertise minimally. As much as we could, but it was a very
minimal amount.
What we did was we totally
focused all of our energies, all of our resources on the retail
salespeople. In other words, computer retail stores. At the time, if you
were going to buy a computer or software, you were going to walk into a
retail store. There was no mail-order. There was no Dell. There was no
Web. The only place that you shopped for a computer was the local
ComputerLand, the local Entrée dealer, the Sears Business Systems, on and
on and on all over the country. There was a growing network of computer
retailers, so what we did was go from dealer to dealer and showed Act to
the salespeople and we sold it to them for $50 a copy. It was a $400
product, and rather than giving it to them for free, we believed that
unless they spent the money on it they likely wouldn’t use it - if we
just gave it away for free. What we did was go from retail store to retail
store, we demoed the product, and we got retail salespeople to use it and
to be aware of it and every time someone walked through their door and
said "I'm looking for something that does this and that." - they
used to sell them dBase or something like that so that they could build
their own - instead they started selling them Act. We called that the
"automate the automators" program.
We automated the automators.
It was a hugely successful
program and then became even bigger as a program once we finally got big
enough to where the distributors - Ingram, Merisel, and SoftSell - started
to believe that "Hey this is a product that we should be
selling." So they took us on for distribution. They would host what
they would call "Soft Teaches". SoftSell would put on a Soft
Teach and they go into a region and they would do training for all of the
salespeople in that local region for all of the retail stores and they
would invite us to go and we would put on one presentation after another
for 20, 30, 40 or 50 people at a time and we would sell it for $50 a copy.
And salespeople bought it by the hundreds. We would go to these things and
we would just sell hundreds of copies and then naturally the salespeople
would use it and start selling to their customer and so, over a two-year
period, it began to really mushroom and so some 4, 5, or 6 years later we
were an overnight success.
That's little different than the dot-com stories where they
try to do it in a year.
Oh right. I mean it was hard work. In addition we went to Comdex
shows and PC Expos and any place where there was going to be a lot of
people who were excited about computers. Obviously they were the really
early innovators, and we would sell to them at as a cheap a price as we
could, trying to cover our costs for being at Comdex or PC Expo.
It was word of mouth. In fact,
we were very conscious that some 60 to 70 percent of our retail sales came
from word of mouth. One person telling another person.
Do you remember how you would sell the product? How you would do
the demo? Was there a certain way that you would demo it?
Oh yes, and it really goes to your pain thing really closely. We
knew how to demo it in 2 or 3 minutes and get somebody to buy it. I mean
literally 2 or 3 minutes and they'd buy it. It was almost tempting to say
"Oh, no no you can’t buy it. You haven't seen the whole demo."
Because we liked to show the whole product. But there was one point where
we knew we had them where we would just simply say "OK, well this is
like an index card, and the index card has a front and a back."
Because Act had fields on the front and fields on the back of the
"card". We used the index card as a metaphor because a lot of
salespeople were using index cards. And I would say "Let's say you're
talking on the phone with somebody", so you say 'Phone' and it would
actually come up and pretend to dial the phone. "Then let's saying
you were talking to a guy and the guy says 'Send me a letter about that'
and you would look at the guy and say 'Don't you hate it when they say
that because you know how much work it's going to be to write a letter.
Well, let me show you what we do with Act.'" And we would say
"Write a Letter" and boom, there would be a letter, already
filled in and the word processor would come up with their name and address
and everything already filled in. And all you would say is
"Print" and boom, here it is. Here’s your letter. And then it
would print the envelope.
And they would say "How
much is this?" It's $395. "OK, great." Or there's a special
here at the show. It's $100. "Great here's my credit card." 2 or
3 minutes, that's all it took.
Why do you think Act succeeded relative to GoldMine, Maximizer,
and those kinds of products?
I think there were a couple of elements. A lot of it was our real
early focus on and determination to dominate retail. And this whole
"Automate the Automators" program made Act fanatics out of the
retail salespeople. These people just as easily could have been GoldMine
fanatics. But once you learn a product it's very hard to pick up something
else and the way they do it. We approached contact management differently
than the way that GoldMine did, and so once people learned Act it was
really hard to change. We were determined to totally dominate the retail
shelf, and we did. Everything we could to defend once we were in and once
we became the dominant player. Anybody who came we defended to the hilt.
No matter who it was or what it was we just defended things to the hilt. I
think that was a lot of it. I think the product has a cleaner and kind of
does a better job of anticipating what it is that somebody wants to do. I
think that is certainly an element. It's simpler than GoldMine. GoldMine
just kept globbing features on and they had layers and layers and layers
of menus and functionality. It just was very complex. Act kind of stayed
the course and stayed a simple product. We added features, but I think
that was a lot of it. We also did a good job marketing the product and
positioning the product. I think our advertising communicated the message.
I can't point to any one reason.
Actually, Ken Dulaney, who's a
Gartner Group analyst who now covers portable devices and PDAs. He used to
cover sales automation and contact management at the Gartner Group. I went
to visit him after I had sold Act to Symantec and he and I had lunch
together. We got talking about what made Act so successful. What really
made it take off versus Goldmine, Maximizer, and the other guys. I said
"I think it was the user interface. I think it was this. I think it
was that." And Ken said "Nah, that's a bunch of crap. It was
that damn demo that you guys did over and over and over. Everywhere you
went. Every Comdex, every PC Expo you did the same demo, and you just
killed everybody with the demo." And I thought "Well, that's an
interesting perspective." From his perspective we just kind of
out-worked them and I think there may be some truth to that. I really
don't know.
Let's switch gears to SalesLogix. Where did you get the sense of
that opportunity? How did SalesLogix come into existence?
SalesLogix really was obvious. When I sold Act to Symantec, we knew
Act needed to move up-market. We knew that Sales Automation was replacing
Contact Management, just from people who were asking us to put more
features and functionality in Act. We told Symantec where the product
ought to go. It needed to go upstream. It needed to go full-scale Sales
Automation. And that's where they said they intended to go. But they
really did not have any of the infrastructure and processes in place to
create a product like that and to take the product in that direction. At
the end of the day Symantec never should have bought Act. The reason they
bought Act was that all the rest of their Windows products were late.
Their salespeople really didn't have much to sell. So they went out
looking for Windows products to sell because they had to keep their
salesforce busy. And so even thought it didn't really fit them
strategically, they just needed another product to sell.
And so, after my 2-year
non-compete expired, I just kind of went back and went "Well, has
Symantec done this? Obviously not. Do I think they are going to? No, I
don't think they're going to. Is anybody else doing this?"
It was just obvious that between
Contact Managers and then the new stuff on the block, the call center
guys, the customer support guys, and Siebel - who set out to go after
enterprise sales automation and went after Brock and Sales Automation Inc.
- that were was this big stuff at the upper end and there's contact
managers and there's nothing in between there.
So to me it just appeared that
there was a huge hole in the marketplace. And basically what we need to
build is a grown-up Act. The same kind of Act ease of use, the same kind
of Act functionality, but that could work for a business. That a business
could adopt across its entire business and run on a network, obviously,
and be true Client/Server. It was just an obvious huge hole to me.
A lot of that was because I got
the dozens and dozens, the hundreds of calls from Act customers when I was
CEO of Act. I would get
calls all the time from people saying "This is pretty good but I wish
it could do this. I wish it could do that." The surprising thing to
me was that in 2 years nobody did anything. I assumed that in 2 years that
opportunity was going to go away. It was just sitting there plain as day.
It wasn't hard to assemble a team who also saw it to go out and raise
money from people who also saw it. It was really easy. In
hindsight, compared to Act, SalesLogix was easy.
Why was it easy? Why did people invest in SalesLogix so
willingly? How did you sell it? How did you spin it?
A certain portion of it was because I had been successful before
building up a company and selling it. VCs think that you can do it again.
Although I think the track record out there is not so good. For many
people in their second or third try it doesn't work. But in this case it
was one that I already did. It was easy I think for people to believe that
I knew what I was talking about. It was out of real experience. It wasn't
market research. Myself and a couple of the other founders of the company
had looked at this thing and all they had to do was look us in the eye and
see that we were on to something. That's why it was easy.
But, it's never easy building a
product, however. I wouldn't want at all to minimize the difficulty of
building a product. Getting from the vision to the product is hard. No
matter when you do it. No matter how you do it. It's hard. It's the whole
process of managing art and science. The art and science of engineering.
It's hard. And it was hard building SalesLogix. But, we had a pretty good
idea of what of the whole that we wanted to sell.
Why do you think that you succeeded the second time around when
so many other people fail? Tell me about your experience, your approach to
the SalesLogix project that led to it to be a success.
I would not want to diminish the team or the effort involved in
SalesLogix, but to some degree in this case a lot was in our favor because
it was an extension of the success that we had already had. As opposed to
a second separate, different success. Had I decided to create a Human
Resources package, that I think would not have been an incredible success.
Because I know nothing about HR.
This was really building off of
what we knew. We knew this marketplace. But it was still different. We
were moving into a different place. But there was a lot of ground that we
had gone over before. We had done a lot of scouting in this territory. So,
the fact that we would be able to go in and stake a claim and make
something work isn't as much of a surprise as it would have been had we
gone into a brand-new territory and been successful.
To a large degree it was knowing
where people's pain was. We knew there was a tremendous amount of pain
being felt by Act users who want to run it in a company and network and
make it all roll up into a single database. We knew there was a tremendous
amount of pain.
We also knew that we likely
could build a rather large network of VARs, of resellers who were quite
anxious to sell a product much more sophisticated than Act. That was
priced much higher than Act. And that would be much more sophisticated
technically than Act.
That didn't exist either, but it
wasn't a major leap to imagine that the need was there. That the network
was there. That we could grow a network.
And that was exactly what we did.
One last thing that I want to talk about is Interact.com. We've
said that you had two successes and then there was Interact.com. What
happened there? What was the story of Interact.com? How did the idea come
about? What made you think that there was something there?
Basically, Siebel had launched Sales.com, Salesforce.com had come
out, and Upshot.com had come out. The concept of the ASP, on-line sales
automation kind of thing was evident. And there were a number of bets
placed by competitors. So we had that data. Also, we had the obvious
mania, at least in hindsight a mania, surrounding the whole dot-com world.
You weren't cool unless you were dot-com.
In looking at where is
Client/Server going to go, we were very conscious of the dot-com
phenomenon. Certainly we were looking at the way that the stock market was
valuing dot-com kind of applications. We came to the conclusion that the
future really was in the dot-com, Internet-related kind of application.
Everybody was saying that that was the way that things were going to go.
You couldn’t pick up a paper or magazine or an analyst report.
Everywhere you went that was what you read. Everybody would question you
"What are you doing in this area?" So there was tremendous
pressure.
And then another catalyst was
becoming aware that Symantec was interested in selling Act. At first I had
very little interest in acquiring the Act brand and the Act product. Just
because I knew it was flat revenue and of course everybody was valuing
growth at the time. So we weren't terribly interested in it.
But the more we thought
about it, the more we realized that if we could build an on-line community
that provided Contact Management and Sales Automation and integrated it
with dot-com kinds of stuff - commerce and travel and related things. The
idea of starting with a 3 million person user base - eyeballs as they were
called - was very compelling. When you start to value what Symantec wanted
for Act and instead turned around and valued it on the basis of eyeballs
and users and a subscription-based service, what they were valuing at $70
or $80 million, we believed could have been worth billions of dollars in
terms of market capitalization.
In some ways you could say that
the whole dot-com mania seduced us into going after that thing. So we
acquired the Act product and attempted to build a product in the dot-com
arena and, as we were doing that, the entire dot-com mania was coming to a
close. It was collapsing in upon itself. By the time we launched the
product, and I would say the product was fair, it wasn't great, in the
month, month and a half experience that we had having it live, the
dot-coms were just imploding. For a variety of reasons, including our own
inability to be able to fund out of profits of the Act or SalesLogix sales
or out of monies that we could raise through the public market, which
became rapidly non-existent because you couldn't raise money for a dot-com
all of a sudden, we made a decision a year ago to shut it down.
And in hindsight we acted
correctly. We acted early. Because I said to the company at the time that
I believe that over the next 6 to 8 months we would see carnage. Just
total, 100% carnage in the dot-com arena and that was right on. There was
no come-back. It was a very quick death to that whole thing.
Now, I still believe that had we
not approached it with the dot-com enthusiasm, had we approached it as
just another product that was for a specific target market and solved
their problems and we hadn't spent do much money doing it that we
jeopardized the company as a whole, that we probably had the makings of a
marketable product, although what we went live with was not.
In my opinion it did not make
any pain go away. I knew it about two months or so before it went live. I
knew that this wasn't going to make any pain go away. But at the time it
still didn't matter because it was dot-com.
People weren't talking about pain.
That's right. They weren't. And frankly, many decisions were made
by my management of the Interact.com product that were based upon being
dot-com versus solving a real problem. Specifically, solving the problem
for an Act user who would likely pay money for your solving that problem.
What was cool was done. What was
practical and of worth and of value was relegated to - well, they didn't
do it. They just simply didn't build it because they were building what
was cool.
We shipped something really
pretty cool, based on dot-com standards. But based on making Act user's
lives better we really missed the mark. We missed the mark big time.
What do you think is going to happen with the whole dot-com
thing? The Internet? How do you see that going? How do you see Interact
Commerce going forward with 2 strong brands, Act and SalesLogix.
I think the Internet is still an incredibly fabulous tool, but it
is still just a network. It's really just a network. The applications that
take advantage of that network and solve very significant and serious
problems for people are going to be fabulous applications. I believe the
Internet has huge growth in front of it, but it is nothing more than a
tool. It’s a technology. It is not the end-all be-all. It's not a
business. It makes pain go away in a sense because I can connect to that
network from anywhere in the world.
This was made obvious to me when
I was in the U.K. when the World Trade Center was hit. I couldn't make a
phone call to the States to tell my family that I was OK, but I could log
on to a local number in the U.K. and I could get into e-mail and send
messages to anybody and since they were on-line we talked over the
Internet.
It’s a fabulous tool, and will
continue to be a fabulous tool, but it's not really a business per se. It
was impossible for the whole dot-com model of everything's free,
everything's free to work.
And yet many of us convinced
ourselves that it could. and
that's the amazing, surprising thing about it. We convinced ourselves that
it could.
Why do you think people convinced themselves that it could work?
Was there a shallower motivation there?
Yeah, the stock market and IPOs and venture capital and the greater
fool theory. You know, there's always a greater fool. If you bought it
today at $90, there'll be somebody tomorrow who will buy it at $100. And
I'll sell it to them.
It was stock market related. I
mean it was definitely stock market related. That's what created the
mania, really.
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